A. "Substance": Pure lead (Pb) is a heavy metal at room temperature and pressure and is a basic chemical element. It can combine with
various other substances to form numerous lead compounds.

B. "Compounds Covered by the Standard": The word "lead" when used in this interim final standard means elemental lead, all inorganic lead
compounds and a class of organic lead compounds called lead soaps. This standard does not apply to other organic lead compounds.

C. "Uses": Exposure to lead occurs in several different occupations in the construction industry, including demolition or salvage of
structures where lead or lead - containing materials are present; removal or encapsulation of lead - containing materials, new construction,
alteration, repair, or renovation of structures that contain lead or materials containing lead; installation of products containing lead. In addition,
there are construction related activities where exposure to lead may occur, including transportation, disposal, storage, or containment of lead or
materials containing lead on construction sites, and maintenance operations associated with construction activities.

D. "Permissible Exposure": The permissible exposure limit (PEL) set by the standard is 50 micrograms of lead per cubic meter of air (50
ug/m(3)), averaged over an 8-hour workday.

E. "Action Level": The interim final standard establishes an action level of 30 micrograms of lead per cubic meter of air (30 ug/m(3)),
averaged over an 8-hour workday. The action level triggers several ancillary provisions of the standard such as exposure monitoring, medical
surveillance, and training.

II. HEALTH HAZARD DATA

A. "Ways in which lead enters your body". When absorbed into your body in certain doses, lead is a toxic substance. The object of the lead
standard is to prevent absorption of harmful quantities of lead. The standard is intended to protect you not only from the immediate toxic effects of
lead, but also from the serious toxic effects that may not become apparent until years of exposure have passed. Lead can be absorbed into your body by
inhalation (breathing) and ingestion (eating). Lead (except for certain organic lead compounds not covered by the standard, such as tetraethyl lead)
is not absorbed through your skin. When lead is scattered in the air as a dust, fume, or mist it can be inhaled and absorbed through you lungs and
upper respiratory tract. Inhalation of airborne lead is generally the most important source of occupational lead absorption. You can also absorb lead
through your digestive system if lead gets into your mouth and is swallowed. If you handle food, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, or make-up which have
lead on them or handle them with hands contaminated with lead, this will contribute to ingestion. A significant portion of the lead that you inhale or
ingest gets into your blood stream. Once in your blood stream, lead is circulated throughout your body and stored in various organs and body tissues.
Some of this lead is quickly filtered out of your body and excreted, but some remains in the blood and other tissues. As exposure to lead continues,
the amount stored in your body will increase if you are absorbing more lead than your body is excreting. Even though you may not be aware of any
immediate symptoms of disease, this lead stored in your tissues can be slowly causing irreversible damage, first to individual cells, then to your
organs and whole body systems.

B. "Effects of overexposure to lead" - (1) "Short term (acute) overexposure". Lead is a potent, systemic poison that serves no known
useful function once absorbed by your body. Taken in large enough doses, lead can kill you in a matter of days. A condition affecting the brain called
acute encephalopathy may arise which develops quickly to seizures, coma, and death from cardiorespiratory arrest. A short term dose of lead can lead
to acute encephalopathy. Short term occupational exposures of this magnitude are highly unusual, but not impossible. Similar forms of encephalopathy
may, however, arise from extended, chronic exposure to lower doses of lead. There is no sharp dividing line between rapidly developing acute effects
of lead, and chronic effects which take longer to acquire. Lead adversely affects numerous body systems, and causes forms of health impairment and
disease which arise after periods of exposure as short as days or as long as several years.

(2) "Long-term (chronic) overexposure". Chronic overexposure to lead may result in severe damage to your blood - forming, nervous, urinary
and reproductive systems. Some common symptoms of chronic overexposure include loss of appetite, metallic taste in the mouth, anxiety, constipation,
nausea, pallor, excessive tiredness, weakness, insomnia, headache, nervous irritability, muscle and joint pain or soreness, fine tremors, numbness,
dizziness, hyperactivity and colic. In lead colic there may be severe abdominal pain. Damage to the central nervous system in general and the brain
(encephalopathy) in particular is one of the most severe forms of lead poisoning. The most severe, often fatal, form of encephalopathy may be preceded
by vomiting, a feeling of dullness progressing to drowsiness and stupor, poor memory, restlessness, irritability, tremor, and convulsions. It may
arise suddenly with the onset of seizures, followed by coma, and death. There is a tendency for muscular weakness to develop at the same time. This
weakness may progress to paralysis often observed as a characteristic "wrist drop" or "foot drop" and is a manifestation of a disease to the nervous
system called peripheral neuropathy. Chronic overexposure to lead also results in kidney disease with few, if any, symptoms appearing until extensive
and most likely permanent kidney damage has occurred. Routine laboratory tests reveal the presence of this kidney disease only after about two-thirds
of kidney function is lost. When overt symptoms of urinary dysfunction arise, it is often too late to correct or prevent worsening conditions, and
progression to kidney dialysis or death is possible. Chronic overexposure to lead impairs the reproductive systems of both men and women. Overexposure
to lead may result in decreased sex drive, impotence and sterility in men. Lead can alter the structure of sperm cells raising the risk of birth
defects. There is evidence of miscarriage and stillbirth in women whose husbands were exposed to lead or who were exposed to lead themselves. Lead
exposure also may result in decreased fertility, and abnormal menstrual cycles in women. The course of pregnancy may be adversely affected by exposure
to lead since lead crosses the placental barrier and poses risks to developing fetuses. Children born of parents either one of whom were exposed to
excess lead levels are more likely to have birth defects, mental retardation, behavioral disorders or die during the first year of childhood.
Overexposure to lead also disrupts the blood - forming system resulting in decreased hemoglobin (the substance in the blood that carries oxygen to the
cells) and ultimately anemia. Anemia is characterized by weakness, pallor and fatigability as a result of decreased oxygen carrying capacity in the
blood.

(3) "Health protection goals of the standard". Prevention of adverse health effects for most workers from exposure to lead throughout a
working lifetime requires that a worker's blood lead level (BLL, also expressed as PbB) be maintained at or below forty micrograms per deciliter of
whole blood (40 ug/dl). The blood lead levels of workers (both male and female workers) who intend to have children should be maintained below 30
ug/dl to minimize adverse reproductive health effects to the parents and to the developing fetus. The measurement of your blood lead level (BLL) is
the most useful indicator of the amount of lead being absorbed by your body. Blood lead levels are most often reported in units of milligrams (mg) or
micrograms (ug) of lead (1 mg=1000 ug) per 100 grams (100g), 100 milliliters (100 ml) or deciliter (dl) of blood. These three units are essentially
the same. Sometime BLLs are expressed in the form of mg percent or ug percent. This is a shorthand notation for 100g, 100 ml, or dl. (References to
BLL measurements in this standard are expressed in the form of ug/dl.)

BLL measurements show the amount of lead circulating in your blood stream, but do not give any information about the amount of lead stored
in your various tissues. BLL measurements merely show current absorption of lead, not the effect that lead is having on your body or the effects that
past lead exposure may have already caused. Past research into lead - related diseases, however, has focused heavily on associations between BLLs and
various diseases. As a result, your BLL is an important indicator of the likelihood that you will gradually acquire a lead - related health impairment
or disease.

Once your blood lead level climbs above 40 ug/dl, your risk of disease increases. There is a wide variability of individual response to
lead, thus it is difficult to say that a particular BLL in a given person will cause a particular effect. Studies have associated fatal encephalopathy
with BLLs as low as 150 ug/dl. Other studies have shown other forms of diseases in some workers with BLLs well below 80 ug/dl. Your BLL is a crucial
indicator of the risks to your health, but one other factor is also extremely important. This factor is the length of time you have had elevated BLLs.
The longer you have an elevated BLL, the greater the risk that large quantities of lead are being gradually stored in your organs and tissues (body
burden). The greater your overall body burden, the greater the chances of substantial permanent damage. The best way to prevent all forms of lead -
related impairments and diseases -- both short term and long term -- is to maintain your BLL below 40 ug/dl. The provisions of the standard are
designed with this end in mind.

Your employer has prime responsibility to assure that the provisions of the standard are complied with both by the company and by
individual workers. You, as a worker, however, also have a responsibility to assist your employer in complying with the standard. You can play a key
role in protecting your own health by learning about the lead hazards and their control, learning what the standard requires, following the standard
where it governs your own actions, and seeing that your employer complies with provisions governing his or her actions.

(4) "Reporting signs and symptoms of health problems". You should immediately notify your employer if you develop signs or symptoms
associated with lead poisoning or if you desire medical advice concerning the effects of current or past exposure to lead or your ability to have a
healthy child. You should also notify your employer if you have difficulty breathing during a respirator fit test or while wearing a respirator. In
each of these cases, your employer must make available to you appropriate medical examinations or consultations. These must be provided at no cost to
you and at a reasonable time and place. The standard contains a procedure whereby you can obtain a second opinion by a physician of your choice if
your employer selected the initial physician.

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